USA's Railey takes Olympic Finn lead

Zach Railey (Clearwater, Fla.) came in second in both races today and now leads the Finn Class at the 2008 Olympic Regatta. With a scoreline of 2,5,2,2 in a venue that has seen finishes all over the board, his consistency has brought him to the top.

He has even gained a little more extension over Great Britain’s Ben Ainslie, who now sits five points behind in second place. Railey knows five points is not far, and is cautious and modest in his analysis of the situation. 'My goal was to come here and sail a conservative regatta. I’m not going to take too many chances. I took one yesterday and it went well, so I have a pretty good record on my risks so far, but I don’t plan to take many.'

Now that he is in the lead, he does not plan to do anything differently. 'It’s too early in the event to be looking at one person.' He said, 'You can’t think, ‘I’m in the lead so I’m going to do something special.’ I’ll just keep executing things the same way, because that’s how I got here.'

After a windward mark altercation with Ainslie, Railey said they talked it over and Ainslie did his penalty turns. Railey was quick to compliment the whole fleet, saying everyone has been obeying the rules and dong their turns.

Railey admitted the fleet is very close, and said the keys will be basics and consistency. Rounding out the top three is Chris Cook from Canada, who has 28 points and is 17 points behind Railey.

1

USA

Zach Railey

2

5

2

2

11

2

GBR

Ben Ainslie

10

1

4

1

16

3

CAN

Chris Cook

8

3

7

10

28

4

SLO

Gasper Vincec

9

11

6

5

31

5

ESP

Rafa Trujillo

12

4

3

14

33

6

CRO

Ivan Kljakovic Gaspic

7

10

10

8

35

7

POL

Rafal Szukiel

3

2

19

12

36

8

FRA

Guillaume Florent

5

8

20

3

36

9

SWE

Daniel Birgmark

14

17

1

6

38

10

FIN

Tapio Nirkko

18

9

9

9

45

11

DEN

Jonas Hoegh-Christensen

16

6

12

16

50

12

BRA

Eduardo Couto

6

16

27

7

56

DNF

13

AUS

Anthony Nossiter

11

22

8

17

58

14

ITA

Giorgio Poggi

17

7

14

21

59

15

GRE

Emilios Papathanasiou

1

27

5

27

60

DNF

DNE

16

NZL

Dan Slater

21

19

18

4

62

17

CYP

Haris Papadopoulos

13

18

21

11

63

18

IRL

Timothy Goodbody

22

13

15

15

65

19

TUR

Ali Kemal Tufekci

20

21

13

18

72

20

NED

Pieter Jan Postma

19

15

16

22

72

21

RUS

Eduard Skornyakov

24

20

17

13

74

22

IND

Nachhatar Singh Johal

4

24

23

24

75

23

CZE

Michael Maier

15

14

22

25

76

24

NOR

Peer Moberg

23

27

11

19

80

DSQ

25

VEN

Johnny Bilbao

26

12

25

23

86

26

CHN

Peng Zhang

25

23

24

20

92

In the Yngling class, Sally Barkow (Nashotah, Wis.), Carrie Howe (Grosse Pointe, Mich.), and Debbie Capozzi (Bayport, N.Y.) sailed to an eighth and a fifth today, launching them from ninth to fourth. They are currently four points away from The Dutch team of Mulder, Bes and Witteveen, and 13 points from the British Ayton, Webb and Wilson, who currently sit in first. Middle position Carrie Howe was happy to have moved up, but kept her eyes on the prize when she said, 'It’s important not to let people get too far ahead.'

Though the USA Yngling girls showed more consistency today, Howe said it’s not getting any easier. 'It’s very subtle. It’s important to recognize that and not give up.' Everyone knows this is just the beginning of a long event and having a positive attitude is the key to moving up no matter where they stand. Howe’s most enthusiastic comment of the day was, 'Go Zach!'

The Yngling and Finn classes got to sail farther from shore on Course Area E and benefited from stronger breezes and weaker currents than yesterday. They saw an average of eight knots today. Meanwhile on course A, the 49ers raced in five knots all day and rarely used their trapezes.

Tim Wadlow (Beverly, Mass.) and Chris Rast (San Diego, Calif.) had their first three races today in the 49er class. They had a great first race finishing in fifth place, but followed with a 14 and a 15. They sit in 13th place overall, but the points all the way up to 7th place are very close and show room to make gains tomorrow.

Over breakfast, Rast and Head Coach Gary Bodie discussed the previous day’s conditions, and pretty much concluded it was very difficult to read. Unfazed, Rast just said, 'That’s okay because it confirms what we thought: Every day is different in Qingdao.' As Rast and Wadlow have a collective three Olympic Regattas under their belts, they have the potential to bring a different type of day tomorrow.

Tomorrow’s forecast calls for morning squalls, clearing to more typical light Qingdao breezes by race time. The 470 Men and Women and the RS:X Men and Women start tomorrow, with two races scheduled for each class.